Bosnia On The Rio Grande

As cited by zenpundit, population cleansing along the US border…

…Last week, at least 30 Mexicans from the town of El Porvenir walked to the border crossing post at Fort Hancock, Texas, and asked for political asylum. Ordinarily, their claim would be denied as groundless, and they would be turned back. Instead, they were taken to El Paso, where they expect to have their cases heard.

No one doubts that they have a strong claim. Their town on the Mexican side of the border is under siege by one or more drug cartels battling for control of the key border crossing. According to Mike Doyle, the chief deputy sheriff of Hudspeth County, Texas, one of the cartels has ordered all residents of the town of 10,000 to abandon the city within the next month.

“They came in and put up a sign in the plaza telling everyone to leave or pay with their own blood,” Doyle said. Since then there has been a steady stream of El Porvenir residents seeking safety on the American side of the border, both legally and illegally. Among them are the 30 who are seeking political asylum.

Here’s zenpundit:

There’s nothing magical about geographic proximity to the United States that would prevent this tactic, if applied widely and backed by lethal examples, from working. What has been done in the villages of Bosnia or Dar Fur can be done in towns of northern Mexico.

Chris Van Avery, one of his commenters writes:

In watching the world, it looks more and more like the lawless among mankind are beginning to figure out that order hangs on the most tenuous of strings. With enough violence and coordinated effort, criminal organizations are discovering they can become a law unto themselves and governments just don’t have the resources to deal with the problem.

It’s going to be an interesting decade…

Doing Well By Doing Good

Progressive journalist Rogers Cadenhead looks into Jane Hamsher’s PAC filings and notes that it’s been very, very good to her (and Glenn Greenwald)…

Accountability Now collected $113,695 in donations during 2009, as it reported to the FEC, and spent $169,992 that year on nine consultants. Six of those people managed the committee: The PAC paid Hamsher $24,000, another $24,000 to PAC cofounder Glenn Greenwald of Salon.Com, $65,710 to two executive directors and $38,047 to two management consultants.

The PAC also paid $4,000 to Firedoglake for “rent,” according to its FEC filings. This expenditure is difficult to understand. Hamsher has operated her web site out of post office boxes at UPS Stores in Los Angeles and Falls Church, Va., and the Accountability Now web site states that “we have purposely avoided hiring a large staff or incurring the type of unnecessary expenses typically incurred by PACs (including even office rentals) in order to make our donors’ contributions last as long as possible.”

Out of the $234,920 raised by FDL Action PAC in 2009, $44,192 was paid to Firedoglake and other business entities affiliated with Hamsher, according to FEC filings. The PAC paid $16,411 to Firedoglake for “shared general administrative expenses,” $14,111 to the site for “list purchase,” $9,920 to CommonSense Media for “online advertising” and $3,750 to KMP Research for “strategic consulting.”

So out of $113K one PAC raised, a total of $151K was spent on salaries and consulting…133% of collections as overhead.

The other PAC paid 19% to Hamsher and related entities.

Damn, when I was trying to launch VictoryPAC, if I’d realized I could have paid myself like that, instead of spending money, I would have kept it going!

Look I don’t often agree with Hamsher politically (but sometimes do). But what I’m unhappy about more than anything is the political class and the platinum hog trough it’s made of politics.

Does Hamsher want to change that, or just get a seat at the banquet?

Gaga Over Qut’b (With Bonus Video)

Abu Mookie weighs in on the “why do they hate us” controversy, triggered by a WSJ oped that points back to Qut’b and suggests that Islamists are unhappy with the West’s libertine ways…from Brett Stephens in the WSJ:

Pop quiz – What does more to galvanize radical anti-American sentiment in the Muslim world: (a) Israeli settlements on the West Bank; or (b) a Lady Gaga music video?

If your answer is (b) it means you probably have a grasp of the historical roots of modern jihadism. If, however, you answered (a), then congratulations: You are perfectly in synch with the new Beltway conventional wisdom, now jointly defined by Pat Buchanan and his strange bedfellows within the Obama administration.

Exum is unimpressed on a number of counts…

You see where Stephens is going with this one, right? I mean, you don’t really need to even read the rest of the column, the point of which is that Islamist outrage over decadent western culture is a more significant driver of conflict and anti-American sentiment in the region than Israeli settlements.

I have no idea if this is actually true. It seems to me that I have seen both empirical evidence and anecdotal evidence lending credence to the idea that outrage over the plight of the Palestinians is, in fact, a driver of conflict and/or anti-American sentiment in the Arabic-speaking world, but there may be more sophisticated research and analysis out there that proves otherwise. And Stephens leans heavily on the writings of Sayyid Qut’b to support his arguments, which makes me nervous, because for all his talents, Stephens is no scholar of Islam, and a few things that should not be studied as a hobby include:

Brain surgery
Multilinear algebra
The strands and evolution of Islamist thought

Exum uses his crafty local knowledge to show us some hot n’spicy Arab music videos (like this one by Haiffa Wahby, which I’ll just gratuitously include):

To make the point (I assume) that Lady Gaga is blameless, there’s a lot of Arabic-language steamy stuff out there – so why should the mad mullahs by offended at us?

The problem with that, of course, is that the video is clearly modelled on Western videos, and that I’d suggest it’s likely that a) it wouldn’t exist had there been no MTV; and b) part of the ‘spice’ of the video is the explicit (hee hee) Westernization of the singer.

The problem Qut’b wrote about was his fear that the purity of Islam had been and was being polluted by the culture of the West…and so it is, and so this video demonstrates. It’s the Burger Kings in Jeddah, the Western pop being played on iPods throughout Medina…it’s the impact Western culture inextricably brings with it when you participate in trade with the West. Japan learned that lesson, and so is the Arab world.

While I’m not going to assert that’s the sole point of friction, I’m hard pressed to believe that it’s not a significant point of friction.

And it’s certainly a key part of the history behind the movement – I don’t see how Exum can deny that.

As a sidebar, I have a healthy respect for expertise. But I’m also deeply suspicious of expertise that wraps itself in a cloak and claims to be impenetrable. A bunch of climate scientists just showed us what was under the cloak, and it wasn’t pretty. So when Exum claims that we need to leave the interpretation of Islamist motives entirely to experts in Islamism…I’ll yield, but only slightly.

And as a final sidebar, Exum slips one in here when he explains that culture isn’t “a more significant driver of conflict and anti-American sentiment in the region than Israeli settlements.”

I’m opposed to expanding the settlements (and have written about it for years).but the hard nut isn’t Arab anger over the expansion of the settlements, it’s Arab anger over the existence of Israel. That does make the problem a little harder to solve, doesn’t it…

And finally – who is this “Lady Gaga” person, anyway?

Bullying, Goldstein, and Politics

So let me lay out the issue I have with Jeff Goldstein – not just with Jeff, but with those who increasingly want to hammer down their political opponents.

My view of politics is essentially communitarian – i.e. that it takes place within a community of people bound together in a polity, who agree to be bound by political decisions and who – to some extent – yield their personal power over their public lives to the political community.

This model allows for a wide range of politics – it works as a construct that limits government power by the consent of the governed, and one that expands it (i.e. it’s not inherently opposed to or in favor of any specific exercise of government power). It says simply that we are fellow citizens and that we will, grudgingly sometimes, accept the decisions made by our political process even when they contradict our own desires.

We can’t and don’t grant that power to everyone in the world, it is inherently limited to our community (hence not cosmopolitan).

The American community, as I’ve written in the past, is a community of belief, not one of (as Heiddiger once famously said) blood and soil. So it is expansive, and flexible and inherently generous (which is to me the root of American Exceptionalism). The condition of that power, in the American ideal, is that we all get to possess our share of it. So when Jim Crow worked to keep blacks from their share, or when laws that forbade women the vote kept them from exercising their share – we worked to strike them down and ensure that everyone had some access to the shared political power.

The image of people being kept from exercising that power by force is inherently reprehensible to me; it defines (to me) the opposite of what our system of government and politics should be. It is most awful when the government blocks people from exercising power – when the political rights people should enjoy to participate in the political life of the community are taken away by the government for political reasons. But it’s awful when it is done privately as well.

I’ve been consistent in my writing, I believe, in saying that the worst sin is attempting to push people out of the argument (yes, there are probably views so extreme that they are rightfully pushed aside – but they’re rare in my view. In fact they’d better be…).

When I see Code Pink mobs shouting Karl Rove down at a booksigning, it’s disgusting.

So why, I’ll ask, is it any different when Jeff threatens those who arouse his pique with violence? That’s not an effort to police a conversation or set boundaries; I can’t see it as anything but an effort to bully people out of an argument. To win the game not with thought, skill, or fact, but by shifting the frame of the discussion from ideas to fear.

I don’t see it.

Look, the tone in a place like Ace or Cold Fury or Blackfive isn’t polite or refined, it’s aggressive, it’s profane and kinda rude (and usually funny as hell). They target people who – in real life – have done bad things – for abuse, outing, and where possible, legal action. They don’t (with one justified exception in Mike Hendrix’s case) target people who say things to them.

They don’t threaten to break people’s bones to shut them up or drive them from the conversation. The fact that Jeff hasn’t actually done it may give him some small relief, but in my view it’s pretty small. Intentions count, and as I said above, as vile as Deb Frisch was in her words, her actions really didn’t give a whole lot of factual basis for believing she was going to act against his kids (note that had her comments been directed against my kids, I would have acted just as Jeff did if not more strongly).

That’s my problem in a nutshell. Because I don’t see how you differentiate political style from political substance all that easily. The GOP is out of power because for all their talk of limited government, they tried to chain themselves to the platinum trough (see Steele’s recent spending problems as a good example of the cultural norm). John Edwards was a narcisstic asshole in person, and I find no reason to believe that his politics would have been any different. At an extreme level, the mindless violence that has characterized Palestinian governance since Arafat is a big reason why the only response the Palestinian polity can make to most challenges – is more mindless violence.

I do buy into the idea that our political system is wounded and that as a nation we’re being dragged down by courtiers in thousand dollar shoes. I’m all about kicking them out on their asses and replacing the government by the governing with a government by the governed. I think it’s critical that we do that – and do it soon – or we’re screwed. I’m to the left of Jeff on some political issues, but I’m right alongside him on this.

But – as I said when I challenged Charles Johnson way back when – it’s a problem to me to stand alongside people whose values – as opposed to beliefs – are so different than mine, and whose values I see as being so destructive to what we both profess to believe in.

It’s a problem for the ‘reform’ movement because if we’re busting our asses to replace one set of power-mad bullies with another – why bother?

I’ve got another, personal problem with Jeff, and that is simply that I believe that as a student of violence he has an obligation to raise the standards for his own behavior. I’m not some super-bad stone killer warrior…but I’ve known more than a couple of them in my life, and being the nosy bastard that I am I’ve spent a fair amount of time interrogating them on their values while picking their pockets for skills. And those values are, simply, don’t be an asshole. Don’t be a bully. Defuse conflict when you can, and end it quickly when you must. Use the confidence your skills offer to create the space to minimize the liklihood of violence – not to egg people on and create it.

Those are values I espouse and try really hard to live. They’re 180 degrees from what I see Jeff doing, and I’m sure that’s part of what makes me so reactive to it.

So that’s why I’m comfy with my decision to pull the link to Jeff, and why I’m (potentially) understanding of his teacher’s desire to pull his name from Jeff’s CV.

I wish it was different. I think Jeff is smart and talented and well-informed enough that he could do what he does without the threats and verbal bludgeons. Someday I hope he sees it that way.

OK, This Isn’t Annoying – It’s Infuriating.

Parents of a Marine killed in Iraq who sued the nutjob Westboro Baptist Church, which has made a habit of picketing the funerals of soldiers killed in action as a way of cheaply attracting attention (on the basis that even hostile attention is good attention, I guess) are being required to pay the legal costs of Westboro Baptist as a result of an appellate court decision.

Lawyers for the father of a Marine from Maryland who died in Iraq and whose funeral was picketed by anti-gay protesters say a court has ordered him to pay the protesters’ appeal costs.

Lawyers for Albert Snyder of York, Pa., also say he is struggling to come up with fees associated with filing a brief with the U.S. Supreme Court.

The high court agreed earlier this month to consider whether the protesters’ message is protected by the First Amendment or limited by the competing privacy and religious rights of the mourners.

On Friday, Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit ordered that Snyder pay costs associated with the Fred Phelps’ appeal. Phelps is the leader of the Westboro Baptist Church, which conducted protests at Marine Lance Cpl. Matthew Snyder’s funeral in 2006 in Westminster.

CLICK HERE to learn more about The Al Snyder Fund.

I’m floored by the workings of the legal system, and floored again that the newspaper actually published the link to the site where the family can take donations.

I just paypal’ed over my Starbucks budget for the week – $20 – and I implore you to do the same thing, and to pass this around to your friends and ask them to do so as well.

I can comfortably say – without feeling like I’m going Goldstein – that the folks who run Westboro Baptist are insane and vile; I’d love to see them get flattened by the legal system.

And a shoutout here to the Patriot Guards who in large part sprung up to protect military funerals from these clowns.

Bad Solutions To Tough Problems

LAUSD and its unions just made a deal to try and keep the foundering district afloat – by screwing the students.

Teachers, whose salaries are the largest part of the budget for the district, agreed to furlough days and a shortened school year in return for pay cuts – in other words, their wages remain the same, but they will work (and get paid) less.

Of course the students – who would benefit from smaller classes and longer school years – pay.

Fire them all, close the institution, paint the buildings, and start over. Note that when I say that I’m not being rhetorical. I’m not sure that LAUSD as an institution is viable if you make care for the students the core metric.

I think the year or turmoil that would come from a radical restructuring (break it up into 4-high school pods?, Reboot it as a larger organization?) would be painful – but the long term effect of destroying the lives of too many children hurts more.

The Abyss Looks Back

Instapundit links to Jeff Goldstein complaining that someone he studied under doesn’t want to be associated with him. Goldstein launches a self-righteous screed about how the wimpy liberals won’t tolerate the truthtelling he’s doing on his blog.

I delinked Goldstein a long time ago, because he’s sounding more and more – sadly – like Deb Frisch. I’m not sorry I defended him against her and sympathized with him … but I wouldn’t want my name on his blog today, either.

What’s the line about staring too long into the abyss?

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